The Outlaw Machine, the Monstrous Outsider and Motorcycle Fetishists: Challenging Rebellion, Mobility and Masculinity in Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising and Steven Spielberg’s Duel

IF 0.2 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM Text Matters-A Journal of Literature Theory and Culture Pub Date : 2019-11-01 DOI:10.18778/2083-2931.09.05
Kornelia Boczkowska
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Abstract

Abstract The paper analyzes the ways in which Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising (1963) and Steven Spielberg’s Duel (1971) draw on and challenge selected road movie conventions by adhering to the genre’s traditional reliance on cultural critique revolving around the themes of rebellion, transgression and roguery. In particular, the films seem to confront the classic road movie format through their adoption of nomadic narrative structure and engagement in a mockery of subversion where the focus on social critique is intertwined with a deep sense of alienation and existential loss “laden with psychological confusion and wayward angst” (Laderman 83). Following this trend, Spielberg’s film simultaneously depoliticizes the genre and maintains the tension between rebellion and tradition where the former shifts away from the conflict with conformist society to masculine anxiety, represented by middle class, bourgeois and capitalist values, the protagonist’s loss of innocence in the film’s finale, and the act of roguery itself. Meanwhile, Anger’s poetic take on the outlaw biker culture, burgeoning homosexuality, myth and ritual, and violence and death culture approaches the question of roguery by undermining the image of a dominant hypermasculinity with an ironic commentary on sacrilegious and sadomasochistic practices and initiation rites in the gay community. Moreover, both Duel’s demonization of the truck, seen as “an indictment of machines” or the mechanization of life (Spielberg qtd. in Crawley 26), and Scorpio Rising’s (homo)eroticization of a motorcycle posit elements of social critique, disobedience and nonconformity within a cynical and existential framework, hence merging the road movie’s traditional discourse with auteurism and modernism.
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亡命之徒机器、怪物局外人和摩托车恋物癖者:肯尼斯·安格尔的《天蝎座崛起》和史蒂文·斯皮尔伯格的《决斗》中的反抗、机动性和男子气概
摘要本文分析了肯尼斯·安格尔(Kenneth Anger)的《天蝎座崛起》(Scorpio Rising)(1963年)和史蒂文·斯皮尔伯格(Steven Spielberg。特别是,这些电影似乎通过采用游牧叙事结构和对颠覆的嘲弄来对抗经典的公路电影形式,在这种颠覆中,对社会批判的关注与“充满心理困惑和任性焦虑”的深刻疏离感和生存损失交织在一起(Laderman 83)。跟随这一趋势,斯皮尔伯格的电影同时将这一类型去政治化,并保持了反叛与传统之间的紧张关系,前者从与墨守成规的社会的冲突转向以中产阶级、资产阶级和资本主义价值观为代表的男性焦虑,主角在电影结局中失去了纯真,以及无赖行为本身。与此同时,安格尔对非法摩托车文化、蓬勃发展的同性恋、神话和仪式以及暴力和死亡文化的诗意解读,通过对同性恋群体中的亵渎和施虐受虐行为以及入会仪式的讽刺评论,破坏了占主导地位的超男子气概的形象,从而解决了无赖问题。此外,Duel对卡车的妖魔化,被视为“对机器的控诉”或生活的机械化(Spielberg qtd.in Crawley 26),以及Scorpio Rising对摩托车的(同性恋)色情化,都在愤世嫉俗和存在主义的框架内提出了社会批判、不服从和不一致的元素,从而将公路电影的传统话语与导演主义和现代主义相融合。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture, based at the University of Łódź, is an international and interdisciplinary journal, which seeks to engage in contemporary debates in the humanities by inviting contributions from literary and cultural studies intersecting with literary theory, gender studies, history, philosophy, and religion. The journal focuses on textual realities, but contributions related to art, music, film and media studies addressing the text are also invited. Submissions in English should relate to the key issues delineated in calls for articles which will be placed on the website in advance. The journal also features reviews of recently published books, and interviews with writers and scholars eminent in the areas addressed in Text Matters. Responses to the articles are more than welcome so as to make the journal a forum of lively academic debate. Though Text Matters derives its identity from a particular region, central Poland in its geographic position between western and eastern Europe, its intercontinental advisory board of associate editors and internationally renowned scholars makes it possible to connect diverse interpretative perspectives stemming from culturally specific locations. Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture is prepared by academics from the Institute of English Studies with considerable assistance from the Institute of Polish Studies and German Philology at the University of Łódź. The journal is printed by Łódź University Press with financial support from the Head of the Institute of English Studies. It is distributed electronically by Sciendo. Its digital version published by Sciendo is the version of record. Contributions to Text Matters are peer reviewed (double-blind review).
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